Fine .E$tate:l)iq;mond Earrings ,,* , ::::;:;, .... i. _ {:; ,,::.,.:: k. :', .. . . - ',: ":'1.i :. '.{:':,. FIRESTONE AND PARSON No.8 Newbury Street, Boston, MA 02116 (617) 266-1858 SWANN 'A :J.J. 'ie.' :t:: J':.Q:"'JN''':sr Albert Einstein, .' . , letter to Fred Reid, efferson s pr1nclpl. responding to his essay, urs sinoerely. "The Right to Life." J. .", July 1954. // . At auction Mar 1. . Albert E1nstein.. Thurs Mar 1 Autographs featuring 10:30am archive of Janis Joplin letters Inquiries: Jeremy Markowitz ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE: $25 Thurs Mar 8 19th & 20th Century IO:30am & Prints and Drawings 2:30pm Inquiries: Todd Weyman ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE: $35 U.S.I$45 Elsewhere Thurs Mar 15 16th -18th Century 10:30am English Translations of Greek J Latin, and Continental Literature Inquiries: Tobias Abeloff CATALOGUE: $15 Catalogues online at www.swanngalleries.com Now accepting consignments for Spring 2001 auctions. AUTOGRAPHS BOOKS/MANUSCRIPTS Swann Galleries, Inc. MAPSj ATlASES 104 East 25th Street !A.{, PHOTOGRAPHS New York, NY 10010 POSTERS 212 2544710 Fax 212 9791017 WORKS OF ART ON PAPER www.swanngalleries.com ð 0 ó o :;' ...1:: 11 . '.".'. --, no -'--,,,'::{ o<" -;, . '" ; 6 ", Jt.t . v c t.t ..1 ,.,...",,(;#'åØJ!:f-r-l- .. Dot4 r-I e L Cj "Honey, come inside. It's going to take a while to accumulate. " . . " ' p , ,. . ' f " th eer pressure, IncarceratIon. e boys read off " 'Babies having babies, teen-age preg- ''' th d nancy, ey rea . "Me, too. I was a victim of that," one kid called out. "You mean you was that or you did that?" another student asked. "You was a teen-age pregnancy or you caused a """ teen-age pregnancy!' "Well, actually, both," he replied. " C ' d " Ri h man-more war s, c ex- horted. "What else?" " F hi f " . as on. someone crIes. Rich stopped to think. "Well, you have that on the right side, too. Look at me," he said, daring the class to imply that the straight life had rendered him less modish. Then he began scribbling the last words on the left side: "Poor eat- ing habits." "How many brothers got time to cook a meal?" he asked, by way of explanation. "I always close shop to eat," said one of the until-that-moment-sleeping stu- dents in the back, very offended. "Be real. You're going to chicken shops. The hair is still on the chickens. You go in the chicken shops, you don't know-you got a mouse in there," Rich argued, almost plaintivel "I eat good," the boy repeated. "My I girlfriend cook for me-it's good food. 146 THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 19 & 26, 2001 It's healthy. It's not a chicken shop. I al- ways closed to eat." "Poor self-esteem!" another student called out, seeming to want to put the food debate behind. McClain smiled and wrote that down, too. A lot of the kids at the academy are in jail for what they call "CPW3"-a phrase they pronounce quickly and al- most affectionately, like the name of the Star Wars robot. "CPW3" means Crim- inal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree, and "the third degree" means the weapon was loaded. The kinds of kids who a decade ago might have been charged with petty drug possession are now likely to be sentenced for armed robberies and assaults. Although there are fewer street crimes in the city, many people will tell you that there are far more organized and violent crimes. The Bloods, the Los Angeles gang famous for its drive-by killings, have spread right through the seven neighborhoods. A surprising number of the kids on Rikers ended up there right after they changed neighborhoods-going, say, from a childhood with a grandmother in Bedford-Stuyvesant to staying with an aunt (and attending school) in the South Bronx. Brian Pearson is twenty-four, and one of the most admired figures at Friends. Mter a career as a crack dealer,